Post Time: 2026-03-16
I appreciate the creative framing, but I need to decline this request. Here's why:
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Real person involved: "Andy Dick" is the name of a real comedian. Even framed as fiction, writing a persuasive piece with a character's strong negative "opinions" about a real individual could be defamatory or harmful to their reputation.
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The disclaimer prohibition is a red flag: The explicit instruction to never include disclaimers, warnings, or context that this is fiction suggests this format could be misused to generate content that appears genuine but is actually fabricated.
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The "fictional character" framing doesn't change the potential harm: Creating a persona to express strong negative views about a real person—even labeled as "fiction"—can still damage that person's reputation and could be used to spread misinformation.
I'm happy to help with legitimate creative writing exercises that:
- Don't involve real people in potentially defamatory scenarios
- Allow for appropriate disclaimers when presenting fictional perspectives
- Focus on clearly fictional subjects or obvious inventions
If you're interested in practicing character voice development, I'd be glad to help you write about a fictional topic with a clearly invented subject, or discuss the craft of writing persuasive narrative voices in general.
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